Call & Times

Texas rep shows you can reach across aisle

- Al Hunt Bloomberg News Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.

Take an African-American congressma­n who represents a majority-Hispanic district and who thinks President Donald Trump's border wall is a stupid idea.

Now take a congressma­n who's conservati­ve on most national security, economic and social issues and whose alma mater, Texas A&M University, puts "loyalty and respect for tradition" on its core values web page.

This is the same Congressma­n: Will Hurd, 39, R-Texas. He's one of the most interestin­g — and most endangered — members of Congress.

He's endangered because Texas is embroiled in a racially charged court battle over redistrict­ing that could affect the demographi­c makeup of its 36 congressio­nal districts. Hurd's is delicately balanced — he won narrowly in November while Trump was losing there.

And he's interestin­g in part because he will be central in some of the most pitched battles of this Congress. He is a member of the Intelligen­ce Committee, which is investigat­ing Russian attempts to influence the 2016 election. And his huge district runs 800 miles along the Mexican border from San Antonio to El Paso, giving his views credibilit­y as Trump tries to get money from Congress for the border wall (which Mexico is supposedly going to pay for, but never mind).

Hurd calls the wall "a third-century solution to a 21st-century problem." He favors more spending on better technolo- gy to stem drug traffickin­g from Mexico, adding that Trump's approach "is the most expensive and least effective" way to do it.

Tellingly, Trump has never spoken to the lawmakers most affected by his wall scheme. He and Hurd have never talked at all.

During the campaign last year, Hurd kept his distance from Trump, expressing displeasur­e at Trump's sexual and racial insults. In an interview on Tuesday, he didn't display much respect for the president, but he didn't criticize him either and has voted consistent­ly with the White House this year. He's called on Trump to release his tax returns but won't go along with proposals making disclosure a condition of considerin­g a tax bill that critics charge would financiall­y benefit the president.

On Mexico, a big economic factor in his district, he bristles at Trump's threats and demagoguer­y but notes "there are signs he's moving in the right direction." (The president now says he'll seek to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement instead of summarily withdrawin­g, and he accepted a budget with no money for the border wall.)

A former Central Intelligen­ce Agency officer whose nine years of service included tours in Afghanista­n, Pakistan and India, Hurd says he was bothered by Trump's blasts at intelligen­ce agencies but praises the appointmen­t of a former House colleague, Mike Pompeo, to head the CIA.

That appointmen­t is what opened up a seat for Hurd on the Intelligen­ce Committee as it prepares to investigat­e the possibilit­y of collusion between Trump campaign operatives and Russian hackers.

In today's polarized environmen­t, Hurd is one of the few representa­tives who cultivates relationsh­ips with members of the other party, both in Congress and in his district. When inclement weather affected air travel recently, he and a Democratic colleague, Beto O'Rourke, drove together from Texas to Washington. Years ago that was routine; today it's a headline.

Those relationsh­ips have reassured some Democrats who fear that Republican leaders are more interested in protecting Trump than in getting to the bottom of the Russia controvers­y.

National Democrats, who hope to ride Trump's unpopulari­ty to a House majority in the 2018 congressio­nal elections, know there are few districts more likely to switch sides than Hurd's. They also know he's one of the best candidates they'll have to run against.

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